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Mexico's navy locates 2 missing sailboats carrying aid off the coast of Cuba

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico's navy said Saturday it found two sailboats that had gone missing while carrying humanitarian aid toCuba.

Associated Press

The vessels carrying nine people departed from Isla Mujeres in southern Mexico on March 20 and then lost contact, fueling concern in Mexico, Cuba and beyond.

In a post on X on Saturday morning, the navy said an aircraft spotted the boats 80 nautical miles (148 kilometers) northwest of Havana, Cuba, and that a boat was on the way to provide help.

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An increasing number of countries and aid organizations havesent shipments of aid to Cubaas a U.S. fuel blockade has caused crippling blackouts andpushes the Caribbean nation to the brink of collapse.

The organization Nuestra América Convoy said Friday that based on the speed of the vessels reported to the Cuban maritime authorities, the window of arrival for the boats in Havana should be between Friday and Saturday and that the boats were led by experienced sailors.

James Schneider, communications director for Progressive International who helped coordinate the Nuestra America convoy to Cuba, thanked Mexican and Cuban authorities for their help on Saturday and said he was "relieved" to hear they were safe.

"The crews are safe, and the vessels are continuing their journey to Havana," he said. "The convoy remains on track to complete its mission — delivering urgently needed humanitarian aid to the Cuban people."

Mexico's navy locates 2 missing sailboats carrying aid off the coast of Cuba

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico's navy said Saturday it found two sailboats that had gone missing while carrying humanitari...
French police thwart a suspected bombing outside a Bank of America building in Paris

PARIS (AP) — French police have thwarted a suspected bomb attack outside a Bank of America building in Paris, authorities said Saturday. One suspect was detained and another escaped.

Associated Press

The national anti-terrorism prosecutor's office, or PNAT, told The Associated Press that it has opened an investigation into alleged terrorism-related offenses.

The suspected offenses include attempted damage by fire or by a dangerous means, the manufacture of an incendiary or explosive device, the possession and transport of such devices with the intent to prepare dangerous damage, and involvement in a terrorist criminal association.

A person was placed in police custody.

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"Well done to the rapid intervention of a Paris police prefecture unit, which made it possible to thwart a violent act of a terrorist nature overnight in Paris," Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez said.

"Vigilance remains at a very high level," Nuñez said. "I commend all security and intelligence forces, fully mobilized under my authority in the current international context."

RTL radio, citing police sources, reported that the incident took place early Saturday when police officers spotted two suspects carrying a shopping bag near the premises of the Bank of America in the 8th arrondissement of the French capital.

One of the suspects, holding a lighter, was attempting to ignite a device, RTL said, while the second suspect managed to escape. The Paris police prefecture declined to comment.

Since the Iran war broke out, French authorities have increased personal protection of some figures from the Iranian opposition and stepped up security around sites that could be a target, including sites linked to U.S. interests and to the Jewish community, Nuñez said earlier this week.

French police thwart a suspected bombing outside a Bank of America building in Paris

PARIS (AP) — French police have thwarted a suspected bomb attack outside a Bank of America building in Paris, authorities...
5 killed after a train and a van collide in a train crossing in rural Mississippi

WIGGINS, Miss. (AP) — Five people were killed when a train and van collided in rural Mississippi, authorities said Friday.

Associated Press

All five killed were in the van, Stone County Coroner Wayne Flurry said. The lone surviving van passenger, a 23-year-old woman, was flown to a hospital, Flurry said. No one aboard the train was reported injured.

The crash occurred when a Canadian Pacific Kansas City freight train collided with a vehicle in a crossing, the railroad said in a statement. The location was near the town of Wiggins about 45 miles (72 kilometers) northwest of Biloxi.

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The Stone County Sheriff's Office was investigating the crash, the company said.

"Our most sincere condolences go out to the families of the victims of this tragedy," the railroad company said.

The driver of the van, Ryan C. Peterson, 26, and the front seat passenger, Kristina Carver, 45, were among those killed, Flurry said. Two of Carver's daughters also died, 22-year-old Emley Chamblee and 20-year-old Sarabeth Chamblee, as did 23-year-old Demarcus Perkins.

5 killed after a train and a van collide in a train crossing in rural Mississippi

WIGGINS, Miss. (AP) — Five people were killed when a train and van collided in rural Mississippi, authorities said Friday...
Report card on America at its 250th birthday: How have we changed?

As the nation approaches its250th anniversary, its population is larger and significantly older, more racially and ethnically diverse and likelier to be foreign-born than it was at the time of the nation'sbicentennial, according to a report compiled by the Pew Research Center.

USA TODAY

The U.S. population has grown to 340 million over the past 50 years, an increase of more than 120 million people, the center said. Much of that growth, it said, has been driven by immigrants, longer life spans, and an increase in Asian andHispanic Americans.

As the 1970s got underway, theBaby Boom generationwas still between 6 and 24 years old, noted Ken Johnson, a professor of sociology at the University of New Hampshire not connected to the report.

"It was the first generation where many women went to college," Johnson said. "Older generations were relatively small, having been born during the war and Great Depression. And immigration was picking up, but it had been modest for decades before."

The Baby Boom generation was the first to have many women with higher education, Johnson said. The resulting opportunities led many women to marry later and have fewer children, patterns that would endure in later generations.

That bears out in thePew analysisof U.S. Census data, which shows Americans today less likely to be married and women more likely to have college degrees.

However, economic gaps have widened, the center said, despite many people being better off financially than they were a half-century ago.

With the Baby Boom cohort now ranging from 62 to 80 years old, the share of Americans aged 65 or older has nearly doubled from 10% to 18%, the center said. While the nation's median age has risen across racial and ethnic groups, the increase is sharpest among White Americans (from 30 to 45 years old) and Black Americans (from 21 to 36 years old).

Immigrants carve out a niche

Since 1970, the center said, non-Hispanic White Americans have formed an increasingly smaller share of the U.S. population, falling from 83.5% to 56.3%. Meanwhile, Asian Americans have climbed from less than 1% to 6% today, while Hispanics, just 4.4% of the population in 1970, now comprise 20%.

The share of foreign-born people in the U.S. has more than tripled since 1970, rising from an all-time low of 4.7% to 14.8% in 2024, the center said. The numbers are highest among Asian and Hispanic Americans and most concentrated in the West and Northeast United States.

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - John Amer (2nd-L), from Pakistan, holds a flag while posing with his son, Uzziah Amer, daughter, Hosanna Amer, and wife, Sajeela Amer, following his naturalization ceremony to become a U.S. citizen at Seattle Center on July 4, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. The annual event drew hundreds of participants from approximately 80 countries.

Johnson noted that White Americans are largely older and no longer having children, while many immigrants are of younger, childbearing age with above-average fertility rates.

"The diversity of the U.S. population is greatest for young children and least for the oldest part of the population," he said.

Census Bureau datareleased this week shows immigration has slowed throughout the country, with nine out of 10 U.S. counties experiencing lower immigration levels between July 2024 and July 2025 compared to the year before.

Meanwhile, the Pew Center analysis found America's population has shifted geographically as well, moving toward Southern and Western states.

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In 1970, it said, less than half of the U.S. population lived in the American South (31%) and West (17%). Today, more than six in ten people live in the Sunbelt, with White Americans comprising about half or less of the population there.

Division over diversity's benefits

The center said Americans largely view the nation's racial and ethnic diversity, and efforts to promote it in the workplace, as positive. However, it found Americans divided along racial, ethnic and party lines about its impact on American culture and about DEI efforts on a fair society.

New members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus pose for a photo at the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) on November 18, 2022 in Washington, DC.

The Pew Center gauged those sentiments late last year and released thesurvey resultsin conjunction with its half-century analysis.

Three-quarters of U.S. adults – including 86% of Democrats and 66% of Republicans – view racial and ethnic diversity as good for the country, the center said.

While 62% of the nearly 14,000 respondents surveyed in late 2025 said diversity positively American culture, they were sharply divided among party lines: Just 45% of Republicans said diversity had a positive impact, compared to 82% of Democrats.

Nearly two-thirds said it was very or somewhat important for U.S. companies and organizations to promote diversity, down from 75% in a Pew survey conducted in 2019. With the share of Democrats edging up a point to 87%, the decline was mostly among Republicans: Just 40% of Republicans said such efforts were important, compared to 61% in 2019.

Likewise, Americans were divided on whether such efforts lead to a fairer society: While 65% of Democrats say diversity efforts have made society fairer, just 18% of Republicans felt the same.

Rev. Al Sharpton speaks during the March on Wall Street on Aug. 28, 2025, in New York City. Rev. Al Sharpton and National Action Network (NAN) lead a protest march on Wall Street, which began at Foley Square, to urge corporate America to resist the Trump administration's campaign to roll back diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. The march comes on the anniversary of the Civil Rights-era March on Washington in 1963.

Respondents broke along racial and ethnic lines as well. Only 38% of White adults said diversity efforts in workplaces and schools have made society fairer, compared to 53% of Black adults, 48% of Asian adults and 46% of Hispanic adults.

America's altered households

The American family has changed substantially in the last half-century, the center said. Americans now marry and have children later in life than they once did, and while U.S. women averaged about three children in 1970, the number has hovered closer to two over the last several decades.

About half of American adults are married today, down from 69% in 1970, with the decline steeper for adults without a four-year college degree. While the portion of adults aged 50 and older who have never been married has risen from 7% to 10%, the share has tripled for Black adults, from 7% to 21%.

Children in the U.S. are much less likely to live with two married parents than they were a half-century ago, the center said, with the share falling from 82% to 63%. The decline has taken place across racial and ethnic groups – except for households headed by Asian adults, which fell only slightly from 87% to 83%.

Mercedes Lopez speaks with son Rafael, 7, at a recent scholarship award ceremony hosted by the Oklahoma Single Parent Scholarship Program.

Meanwhile, 22% of Americans now live in multigenerational households, the center said, compared to 13% in 1970. The increase has been highest among Black, Hispanic and Asian Americans, climbing to 30% for those groups compared to 16% for White Americans.

"A lot of Asian Americans still live in high-cost housing markets," said Melany de la Cruz-Viesca, deputy director of the Asian American Studies Center at the University of California Los Angeles. "If they live in California or New York, it's more likely they feel comfortable living together. There's a lot of stigma around risky spending, and a belief that it's better to save and not be in debt than to be on your own."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Report card on America at its 250th birthday: How have we changed?

Report card on America at its 250th birthday: How have we changed?

As the nation approaches its250th anniversary, its population is larger and significantly older, more racially and ethnic...
Tennis Stars' Sizzling Style Brought the Heat to the 2026 Miami Open (See the Fire 'Fits!)

The ATP stars made a splash with their stylish outfits upon their arrivals at the 2026 Miami Open

People Flavio Cobolli (left), Gabriel Diallo (center), Yunchaokete Bu (right).Credit: ATP Tour

NEED TO KNOW

  • The players stepped out in diverse designer looks for their pre-match tunnel walks at Hard Rock Stadium in Florida

  • The prestigious tennis tournament runs from March 15 to March 29

The only thing that rivals the hot, Florida sun is the fire 'fits worn by the ATP players who arrived to Hard Rock Stadium to compete in the2026 Miami Openthroughout its two-week stretch, which kicked off on Sunday, March 15, and wraps with finals on Sunday, March 29.

Flavio Cobolli, Gabriel Diallo, Yunchaokete Bu and more men's tennis stars rocked diverse looks for their fashion-forward entrances to the sports scene as they made their way inside the arena before changing into their athletic apparel to play.

With the Sunshine State's high temps and often-humid climate, many of the players opted for outfits made of lighter materials and short-sleeve designs to combat the heat. Others, however, stuck to sophisticated suits — and even a leather jacket! — for their palm tree-lined tunnel walks.

Some of the players' outfits had special significance behind their looks. For example, Zizou Bergs of Belgium paid tribute to the tournament's venue by wearing a designer Miami Heat shirt in support of the NBA team that plays in the tennis event's host city.

Now, scroll on to see a roundup of the ATP star's spiffed-up, pre-court clothes at the 2026 Miami Open!

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Zizou Bergs

Zizou Bergs at the 2026 Miami Open.Credit: ATP Tour

The high temps in Miami might have been hot, but Bergs' pre-match outfit was the epitome of cool. The Belgian tennis pro arrived to the sports scene in a black leather jacket by Golden Goose, leaving it unzipped to flash his shirt that was very fitting of the host city: a Miami Heat graphic tee from the NBA team's collab with Kith.

Gabriel Diallo

Gabriel Diallo at the 2026 Miami Open.Credit: ATP Tour

Diallo, 24, served effortless style with a light, airy ensemble appropriate for his tropical, palm-tree filled surroundings as he made his way to the locker rooms ahead of his match. The Canadian player wore entirely Golden Goose, including a button-down shirt with striped detailing on the collar and sleeves and khaki cargo pants. He completed his outfit with brown boat shoes and a gold cross necklace.

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Frances Tiafoe

Frances Tiafoe at the 2026 Miami Open.Credit: ATP Tour

The Florida sun was no threat to Tiafoe, 28, who covered up in a lightweight Hermes set complete with a tan jacket layered over a Lululemon white T-shirt that he tucked into his coordinating tan pants. He tied his outfit together with Hermes shoes and Jacques Marie Mage sunglasses to top it off.

Related:Carlos Alcaraz Keeps His Promise by Debuting New Leg Tattoo After Australian Open Win

Taylor Fritz

Taylor Fritz at the 2026 Miami Open.Credit: ATP Tour

Fritz, 28, rolled up to the Miami Open like a boss, wearing entirely BOSS for a sophisticated, yet casually-cool look. The ATP star arrived in a grey suit by the German designer, layering the jacket over a white dress shirt that he left unbuttoned to reveal a simple white top underneath. He paired it with black loafers and sported a Rolex watch.

Flavio Cobolli

Flavio Cobolli at the 2026 Miami Open.Credit: ATP Tour

Looking cool comes naturally to Cobolli, 23, who arrived to Hard Rock Stadium in a crisp white suit by Brunello Cucinelli. The double-breasted jacket was worn mostly fastened except for the top button, revealing a clean white shirt beneath, and finished with a Bianchet timepiece.

Related:Serving Looks! Frances Tiafoe, Taylor Fritz and More Tennis Stars Ace Style at Indian Wells

Yunchaokete Bu

Yunchaokete Bu at the 2026 Miami Open.Credit: ATP Tour

As a top-tier player with a complex game, Bu, 24, kept his outfit simple with a white short-sleeve polo from Burberry. The top was complete with a collar and embellished with an emblem on the upper-left corner of the shirt. He accessorized with a black watch.

Read the original article onPeople

Tennis Stars' Sizzling Style Brought the Heat to the 2026 Miami Open (See the Fire 'Fits!)

The ATP stars made a splash with their stylish outfits upon their arrivals at the 2026 Miami Open NEED TO KNOW ...

 

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